-- card: 11693 from stack: in.'90AMUG News™ -- bmap block id: 0 -- flags: 0000 -- background id: 3780 -- name: -- part 1 (button) -- low flags: 00 -- high flags: 0000 -- rect: left=62 top=222 right=244 bottom=102 -- title width / last selected line: 0 -- icon id / first selected line: 21001 / 21001 -- text alignment: 1 -- font id: 0 -- text size: 12 -- style flags: 0 -- line height: 16 -- part name: ----- HyperTalk script ----- on mouseDown set icon of me to "EyeClose" end mouseDown on mouseUp set icon of me to "EyeOpen" dispPict "D1" end mouseUp -- part contents for background part 2 ----- text ----- 30 -- part contents for background part 9 ----- text ----- Informed Designer -- part contents for background part 8 ----- text ----- ...................................Lea Bromley -- part contents for background part 1 ----- text ----- printer or an ImageWriter is supported. Spot color is available if your form needs it. The section describing color handling was thorough, including crop marks, registration marks and color names. A fair amount of time is needed to learn about “the Drawing”, setup, size, offset and so forth. This is a basic building block of starting to design your form and I would not recommend skipping this part. You might feel brave about putting in your lines and check boxes and titles, but this “Drawing” controls the window where you will be working. The numbered pages of a form are the ones you actually fill out and print. Each form can have between 1 and 99 numbered pages, with each page having as many as 99 parts (i.e., Customer Copy, -- part contents for background part 10 ----- text ----- Accounting Copy, Packing Slip). Creating multipart pages is as simple as choosing the Multipart command from the File menu. One new concept was that of the “work page”. There is one work page for each numbered page; but the work page does not print, and whatever you place on the work page does not show on any other page of the form. The manual indicates that there are two common uses of the work page: as a place to put instructions or information useful to someone filling out the form, and as a place to put cells that should not be printed with the rest of the form (such as one required for calculations). Every page has a master page. It functions much like